One-Dimensional Constitutive Model for Porous Titanium Alloy at Various Strain Rates and Temperatures

In this paper, the accurate description of the relationship between flow stress and strain of porous titanium alloys at various strain rates and temperatures were investigated with dynamic and quasistatic uniaxial compression tests for a further study on the processing mechanism of porous titanium m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhiqiang Liu, Feifei Ji, Mingqiang Wang, Tianyu Zhu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-01-01
Series:Metals
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/7/1/24
Description
Summary:In this paper, the accurate description of the relationship between flow stress and strain of porous titanium alloys at various strain rates and temperatures were investigated with dynamic and quasistatic uniaxial compression tests for a further study on the processing mechanism of porous titanium material. Changes in their plastic flows were described through the one-dimensional Drucker-Prager (DP) constitutive model. Porous titanium alloys were micromilled in a DP simulation. After all parameters had been obtained in the DP model, the experimental and simulated true stress-strain curves and flow stress levels of two porous titanium alloys were compared to estimate the precision of the model. The findings were as follows. First, porous titanium alloys show deformation patterns characterized by pore collapse-induced deformation and have strong stress-hardening effects, but the patterns did not include noticeable plastic-flow plateaus. Second, porosity strongly affects the mechanical strength, strain-rate sensitivity, and temperature sensitivity of both alloys. Third, the DP model sufficiently describes the mechanical properties of both alloys at 25–300 °C and at strain rates of 1000–3000 s−1, with a deviation of 10% or lower.
ISSN:2075-4701